delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action brought in 1886, in a justice’s court in Norfolk, State of Virginia, by Wright, the defendant in error, against the plaintiffs in error, R. P. Voight & Co., to recover fifteen dollars for fees alleged to be due to the plaintiff for inspection of flour. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and an appeal taken to the corporation- court of the city of Norfolk, by which court the judgment was affirmed. This being the highest court of' the State in which a decision in the suit' could be had, a writ of error to the same was sued out of this court, and the case is now here for review, tlie question in the case has respect to the constitutionality of. a law of Virginia, passed in March, 1867, by which it wa» declared as follows : (1) “ All flour brought into this State and offered for sale therein shall be reviewed, and have the Virginia inspection marked thereon. (2) Any person or persons selling or offering to sell such flour without review or inspection, as provided in the preceding section, shall be fined the sum of five dollars, for the use of the commonwealth, for each barrel so sold or offered for sale.” This law was afterwards carried into the code of 1873, constituting the 10th and 11th sections of-the 86th chapter of the said code. The laws also gave to the inspector a fee of two cents for each barrel inspected. There was no law requiring flour- manufactured in Virginia to be thus inspected as a condition of selling it or offering it for sale, though by the inspection laws of the State manufacturers of flour might have their flour so inspected if they saw fit. It may be proper to add that the law in question is now repealed. '
On the trial of the cause in the corporation court the following bill of exceptions was. taken, to wit:
“ Be it remembered that upon the trial of this cause the following statement of facts was agreed between the parties, to *64 wit: The following facts are agreed in this case to have the same force and effect as if regularly proved by competent proof:
“ 1st. The plaintiff is the flour inspector for the city of Norfolk, duly appointed and commissioned as such.
“ 2d. The defendants are wholesale grocery merchants, conducting their business in the said city.
“ 3d. The bill of the plaintiff is for the inspection of 750 barrels of [lour belonging to the defendants, and brought into this State from other States, and inspected as required by c. 86 of the Code of Yirginia, edition 1873, before the same was sold or offered for sale and after the same was placed in his storehouse.
“And, to maintain the issue on his part, the plaintiff and appellee, E. T. Wright, read the sections of the statute of Yirginia, as set forth in chapter 86 of the Code of Yirginia, edition of 1873, in relation to the inspection of flour brought into this State from sister States, and, to maintain the issue on their part, the'appellants and defendants, R. P. Yoight & Co., read from the commercial clause of the Constitution of the United States, viz., art. I, sec. 8th, clauses 1 and 3, and section 10, clause 2, and art. IY, sec. 2, clause 1, and insisted that the said sections of said statute of the State of Yirginia are in conflict with the Constitution of the United States; but the court overruled the objections of the said R. P. Yoight & Co., and expressed the opinion that the said statute of the State of Yirginia is not in conflict with the said Constitution of the United States, and thereupon gave judgment for the plaintiff; and to this opinion of the court the defendants, R. P. Yoight & Co., by°their counsel, except and pray that this bill of exceptions may be signed, sealed and made a part of' the record in this cq§e, which is accordingly done.
“D. Tucker Brooke, [seal]
• “ Judge Corporation Court of the City, of Norfolk, Vd.”'
The State of Yirginia has had a system of inspection laws from an early period; but they have related to articles produced in the State, and the main purpose- of the inspection.
*65
required has been to prepare the articles for exportation, in order to preserve the credit of the exports of the State in foreign markets, as well as to certify their genuineness and purity for the benefit of purchasers generally. . Chief Justice Marshall, in
Gibbons
v. Ogden, said: “The object of inspection laws is to improve the quality of articles produced
fiy
the labor of a country ; to fit them for exportation, or it may be, for domestic use.”
It may be remarked, in passing, that in the notes to
Turner
v. Maryland,
But, be this as it may, and without attempting to lay down any specific proposition on this somewhat. difficult subject, there is enough in the case before us to decide it on satisfactory grounds, without passing upon the general right of the State to inspect imports or the qualificatio.ns to which it must necessarily be subject, • The law in question is a discriminating law, and requires the inspection of flour brought from other States, when- such inspection is not required for flour manufactured in Virginia.' This aspect of the case brings it directly within the principle of
Brimmer
v. Rebman,
The judgment of the Corporation Court of the city of Norfolk is
Reversed, and ■the cause remanded for further ¡proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
